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If you love getting pampered, you will love the high-end hair services by Rusty's Barber Shop in Brooklyn.
This salon offers personalized haircuts and color processes for both men and women.
At Rusty's Barber Shop, the talent, treatments, and top-notch customer service will ensure that your hair looks beautiful and feels great when you walk out the door.

Celebrate your latest accomplishment with a fabulous cut and color from Braider On Wheels in Brooklyn.
The high-quality hair services at this salon will leave you feeling like a gorgeous bombshell.
The stylists at Braider On Wheels are ready to give you a whole new look so schedule your makeover appointment today.

Put your long work week behind you and treat yourself to a special hair care treatment at Hilltop Barber Shop in Baltimore.
Keep up with the latest and greatest hairstyles and schedule your next hair makeover today.
So keep your hair looking on fleek and schedule an appointment at Hilltop Barber Shop today.

Thinking about highlights? Browse the color options at Gino's Barber Shop in Brooklyn and find the perfect fit.
Tired of flat or frizzy hair? Head on over to this salon and enjoy a relaxing hair remedy, such as hair cuts.
Schedule an appointment at Gino's Barber Shop and give your hair the royal treatment.

Vivid Salon and Spa's beauty experts enhance looks with a wide variety of salon and spa services. They fix botched at-home dye jobs and add extensions in the salon area, and perform skin-soothing facials or tension-busting massages in the spa area. With waxing services, they make skin as smooth as a newborn cue ball.
When those services aren't enough, they call in backup in the form of a plastic surgeon and a dermatologist. The two doctors make their way to the salon every so often to smooth wrinkles with Botox injections and execute medical-grade facial treatments.

Bring your sexy back with a professional hare care service from Hair Cuttery in Linthicum Heights.
Out with the old, in with the new. Switch up your hairstyle at this salon.
This establishment welcomes walk-ins so that your beauty needs never need to be put on hold.
At Hair Cuttery, you can quickly and safely pay with any major credit card.
Drivers will embrace the parking lot located next door to Hair Cuttery.
Your hair deserves the best hydrating treatment, and at Hair Cuttery you can find it.

Groupon Guide

Dads come in two models: those with facial hair and those without. But whether they’re sporting a full beard, a goatee, mutton chops, or a clean-shaven mug, there’s some upkeep necessary.
Enter these easy-to-make DIY Father’s Day gifts, which will beef up and fancify Pop’s grooming routine. For fuzzy fellows, mix up the beard oil, which strengthens whiskers and prevents dry skin. Smooth-faced men can spritz on the aftershave for moisturizing razor-burn relief. And, thanks to essential oils, both concoctions smell good, which is a requirement for dads—or at least husbands—in our book.Once you’ve bottled the mixtures, add the finishing touch of printable labels inspired by vintage apothecary packaging. They even say “Made with Love,” ensuring that your effort for DIY Father’s Day gifts trumps that of your brother, who always just draws a smiley face on a rock and calls it a paperweight.Beard OilWhether his beard is in the style of a lumberjack, a sea captain, a classics professor, or anything in between, it could use this oil. Its jojoba oil strengthens and moisturizes facial hair, while sweet almond oil prevents dry skin. Peppermint oil helps eliminate frizzing and skin flakes that could mar an otherwise majestic beard.What You Need2 oz. glass eyedropper bottle2 tbsp. jojoba oil1 tbsp. sweet almond oil2 drops tea tree oil2 drops eucalyptus oil2 drops cedarwood oil1 drop peppermint oilPour the ingredients into the bottle and shake them vigorously. For use, apply to a damp beard. Aftershave
Your fresh-faced gentleman could use some skincare products, too. Tea tree oil cleanses and smoothes skin, and it is often used to prevent and treat acne along with eucalyptus oil and cedarwood oil. Witch hazel prevents razor burn. And here, peppermint oil’s antimicrobial properties work to cool the skin.
What You Need2 oz. glass bottle with mist sprayer2 tbsp. water2 tbsp. witch hazel1/8 tsp. jojoba oil4 drops tea tree oil4 drops eucalyptus oil4 drops cedarwood oil4 drops peppermint oilPour the ingredients into the bottle and shake them vigorously. Post-shave, spritz and pat the aftershave onto the skin.Photos by Jamie Ramsay, Groupon
Check out some related reads:Old-School Barbers of the Old-School Barber ShopPart bathhouse, part barroom, part time warp, the classic barbershop may just be the last bastion of American masculinity.Nine Accessories Every Man Should Own by 30
f you're transitioning from college clothes to grown up ones, the right accessories—like a wallet without velcro—make everything easier.

About a dozen guys filled the old-school barber shop. Most came straight from work, security ID badges hanging off dress slacks. Some had plans afterward with wives or friends. But in the two hours I spent at Joe’s Barber Shop in Chicago one Thursday night, nobody seemed to care about work or wives. Joe’s has five barber’s chairs open on Thursday evenings, and they were full all night. Those waiting drank a complimentary can of classic Coors, stocked in a mini-fridge by the door. The conversations changed fast. So did the music (Pink Floyd bled into Motörhead), and so did the shaggy-haired men who climbed into the seafoam-green chairs, only to climb out with classic fades, slickbacks, or punkish Caesar cuts. Because of that constant flux, time barely seemed to tick off the clock. And the vibe was hard to pin down. The barbershop felt part barroom, part bathhouse, part time warp. Though since the shop so intoxicates you (both figuratively and literally, thanks to that Coors), by the time you walk out you couldn’t care less how to categorize it. You just got a great haircut, and you had a great time doing it.There’s a ton of energy bouncing off Joe’s wood-paneled walls, some of it undoubtedly well-aged from the shop’s nearly 50-year history, 30 spent at this location. It is perhaps the most old-school barber shop in what is America’s most old-school town—Chicago.Joe Sr. was born in Italy, graduated from barber school in 1964, and opened Joe’s Barbershop in 1968, after he got back from Vietnam. He’s been at this location for 30 years, and in 2010, his son Joe Jr. joined him at the shop."There's not many places like this left. Maybe bars and pool halls. But that's it."– Joe Jr.The menu of services is simple. Appointments are not accepted."The haircut is only [a tiny fraction] of it. People want to know if there's parking outside, if it's easy... I want people to put their phones down. I hate it when there's four or five guys sitting there staring at their phones. There's a reason there's no wifi here."– Joe Jr.Above, Will trimmed a side-part. All licensed by the State of Illinois, the barbers are supremely confident in their abilities to cut men’s hair—which they say is a completely different ballgame from cutting women’s hair. "Don't go to where your mom goes to get her haircut."– Bo Rada, barberThree coworkers made a post-work trip for haircuts.“I exude class everywhere I go,” said one.The tools of the trade. A typical haircut requires six:The Cape, to shield the body from cut hair The Neck Strip, to keep cut hairs from sticking to the neck. Barbers collect them to tally up their haircuts at the end of the night.The Combs, to detangle and whetten the hair before the cut. They include taper and styling varieties.The Clippers, to cut. They come in three varieties: the powerhouse, taper, and trim.The Blades, to fit into the clippers. The quarter-inch is the closest cut next to bare clippers.The Product, to style. At Joe’s they use pomades and beard oils made by house brand Sixty8 Provisional Co., which Joe Jr. co-founded in 2013.“There’s a rogue High Life in there,” one customer said.“Of course,” another replied. “You gotta keep the Coors honest.”"Our Yelp reviews are hilarious. People say we all look like convicts, that we're rockabillys." – Joe Jr.The ceiling beam pictured above is where the shop used to stop. Up until 2014, Joe’s had just two barber’s chairs. Around 2007, they began to see an uptick in business, something Joe Jr. recognized as part of a larger national trend toward traditional grooming, even referencing period TV shows Mad Men and Boardwalk Empire. The resurgence quickly led to two-hour waits. So they remodeled the shop, and now they have six chairs with room for a seventh. What remains is the wood paneling—except now there’s twice as much.Joe Sr. doesn’t work on Thursdays or on Sundays. No other barber is allowed to use his station when he’s not there.“My dad doesn’t like change,” Joe Jr. said about the shop’s recent renovations. “He’s had the same sock drawer for 50 years.”Not that Joe Sr. has lost his edge. “He was an army barber,” Joe Jr. said. “He can do a flattop in 17 strokes.”Joe Jr. poured customers complementary dixie-cup shots (or tastes, as he says) of Fernet, an Italian amaro whose sponsorship put a bottle at each barber’s station.In case anything gets out of hand."We're a fabric of the neighborhood."– Joe Jr."Everyone wants to be a part of something... They all want to know that they got a guy."– Joe Jr.Photos by Andrew Nawrocki, GrouponGet schooled on more men's grooming tips:How Much Work Are These Men's Haircuts?Beard-Grooming Tips from a Man Competing for America's Best Beard

Even if you’re a stylish guy, navigating your 20s in style can be hard. You’re growing out of your favorite college threads—culturally, and sometimes physically—while trying to find a more grown-up wardrobe for work and play. You need the right garments to transition into adulthood, but the right accessories can take men’s style to the next level. (You’d be surprised how quickly a sharp pair of shoes can make you feel like Fred Astaire.) Here, we’ve collected the nine essential men’s accessories every guy should own by his 30th birthday.1. Wooden flag iPhone case, Tag Twenty Two ($33.99); 2. Rectangular-buckle belt, Versace ($149.99); 3. Fairmount leather watch, Stuhrling Original ($69.99); 4. Original wayfarer, Ray-Ban ($129.99); 5. Mitchell file wallet, Jack Spade ($64.99); 6. Cody oxford, Joseph Abboud ($39.99); 7. Cashmere scarf, Sofia Cashmere ($29.99); 8. Stainless-steel cufflinks, Ox and Bull ($22.99); 9. Peter messenger bag, M.R.K.T. ($34.99)1. A stylish phone case.Not only will it help prevent cracks and scratches, but a distinctive one will keep you from confusing your phone with someone else’s. (Even after a scotch or two.)2. A leather belt.Canvas belts are fine with shorts, but opt for leather with suiting and denim.3. A watch.Sure, your phone can tell time, but a great-looking timepiece shows a little extra effort.4. Sunglasses.Specifically, sunglasses you didn’t get for free at a bar. Classic Wayfarers go with anything from board shorts to boardroom suits, and matte-finish frames add a modern edge.5. A leather wallet.No one should be able to hear your wallet opening. Swap velcro for Italian leather, and don’t be afraid to experiment with color. Black and brown are timeless, but navy and merlot are beautiful alternatives.6. Oxfords.There’s more to a shoe collection than sneakers and whatever you wear to weddings. An oxford is versatile enough to pair with jeans, tailored shorts, and suits.7. A scarf.Whether you’re wearing a suit and an overcoat or a bomber jacket and jeans, a scarf in a luxury textile polishes off the look.8. Cufflinks.They’re a must for formal occasions—black-tie weddings, job interviews, getting knighted… 9. A messenger bag.Think of it as the happy medium between a backpack and a briefcase. Look for a modern design with architectural details.Up your game with more men's style tips:How Much Work Are These Men's Haircuts?I Have a Wedding in Vegas and Nothing to Wear. Help!